The bike raced by Egan Bernal as he became the first, and so far only, Colombian to win the Tour de France has allegedly been stolen, the Ineos Grenadiers rider reported on social media.
The special yellow Pinarello Dogma F12, ridden by Bernal on the Champs-Élysées during the final stage of the 2019 Tour, has been stored since his groundbreaking triumph at his home in Zipaquirá, but appears to have been stolen from a public exhibit in Colombia dedicated to the 28-year-old’s achievements.

In a video posted on social media by Colombian journalist Diego Rueda, Bernal shared photos of the exhibit, both with the bike in place and now without it, the 2021 Giro d’Italia winner confirming that CCTV footage is currently being assessed to track down the thieves.
“Hello guys, I have something to tell you. Imagine: my bike has disappeared. Nothing,” Bernal said in the video.
“We are looking at cameras, finding out what happened. Hopefully this can be cleared up quickly. In any case, we will keep you informed as it happens. Stay tuned. Ciao.”
Nos llega este video de nuestro campeón Egan Bernal, quien reporta la desaparición de su bicicleta amarilla con la que conquistó el Tour de Francia. Una pieza que simboliza la gloria de Cundinamarca y el orgullo de todo un país.
Se busca esclarecer dónde está la bicicleta. pic.twitter.com/4BBoL5PlI3
— Diego Rueda (@diegonoticia) November 5, 2025
No other details have emerged related to the break-in, sparking as yet unfounded speculation on social media that the clip is part of a publicity campaign by Bernal.
The 28-year-old is currently back home in Colombia for the off-season and has in recent days been promoting the 2025 edition of the Gran Fondo El Origen x Egan ride, which is set to take place on the weekend of 15 and 16 November in Zipaquirá.
The bike in question, a one-of-a-kind Pinarello Dogma F12, was presented to Bernal ahead of the final stage of the 2019 Tour, which he won in dramatic fashion ahead of teammate Geraint Thomas, and features a handwritten congratulations from Pinarello boss Fausto Pinarello and a year’s supply of yellow paint.

This week’s reported theft, however, isn’t the first time that a Dogma raced by Bernal has been stolen by bike thieves.
Last February, Bernal’s team-issue Pinarello from the 2019 Tour, along with bikes formerly belonging to Peter Sagan, Mathieu van der Poel, and Julian Alaphilippe were nicked during an overnight burglary at the Shimano Experience Centre in Valkenburg, in the Netherlands.

Shimano revealed at the time that that six bikes “beyond any monetary value” were taken during the raid, staff arriving at the site in the morning to discover that locks had been forced open and bikes stolen.
Bernal’s Pinarello Dogma, Van der Poel’s world championships edition Canyon Aeroad CFR, a Scott Foil ridden by Fabio Jakobsen, Alaphilippe’s Specialized S-Works, Matej Mohorič’s Merida REACTO Team Pearl Design, and Sagan’s Specialized S-Works Venge were all taken from the exhibition centre, with Shimano saying it was “relieved” that nobody was hurt during the targeted break-in.

In 2021, following his victory at the Giro d’Italia, Bernal gifted a Pinarello Dogmas to none other than Pope Francis, the special papacy-themed bike featuring a colour scheme based on the flag of Pope Francis’ native Argentina, the papal seal, his regnal name, and his birth forename, Jorge Mario, as well as a Shimano Ultregra groupset, Vision wheels, and Pirelli P Zero tyres.
Last year, the late Pope decided to auction off Bernal’s Dogma, along with a Giro pink jersey signed by the Colombian. The bike, despite experts estimating that it would fetch between £20,000 and £25,000, eventually sold for £12,000 – close to the price a standard F12 retails for.
> Egan Bernal’s recovery from life-threatening horror crash detailed in medical research paper
The 2025 season saw Bernal record arguably his best, most consistent campaign since his horrific, high-speed, life-threatening training crash into a parked bus in early 2022, which left the Ineos rider with fractured vertebrae, a fractured femur, chest trauma, and a punctured lung.

And following a long and arduous recovery process, Bernal recorded his best grand tour GC performance since his crash at the Giro d’Italia in May, finishing seventh overall, before also winning a protest-impacted Vuelta stage in the mountains, outsprinting Mikel Landa to a makeshift finish line for an emotional, redemptive victory.
